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Little Hans

Little Hans. An analysis of a phobia in a 5-year-old boy. Methodology. Case study (clinical) Participants: Little Hans (5-years old), his mother (a former patient of Freud’s), his father, an acquaintance and strong supporter of Freud.

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Little Hans

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  1. Little Hans An analysis of a phobia in a 5-year-old boy

  2. Methodology • Case study (clinical) • Participants: Little Hans (5-years old), his mother (a former patient of Freud’s), his father, an acquaintance and strong supporter of Freud. • Presenting problems: fear of horses, anxiety, fear of separation from mother • Procedure • Father questioned Hans and interprets responses • Father records “conversations” and consults with Freud

  3. History • Hans was born in 1903, his sister Hanna was born in 1906. • Anxiety (about losing his mother) and fear of horses started in 1908 • Symptoms began right after being threatened about playing with his “widdler.” • Hans was afraid a horse would bite him in the street and was unwilling to go out of the house • Particularly afraid of horses pulling heavy loads, drawing carts, or buses. • Said that the horses he feared most were the white ones, especially those that were black around the mouth and had blinders on.

  4. Questions • Is the fear of horses a problem that should be treated? • Is it a problem that Hans’s father conducted the psychoanalysis?

  5. Giraffe fantasy (pp. 36-39) • Nearly 3 months after Father began recording his "conversations" with Hans: • "During the night of 27th-28th Hans surprised us by getting out of bed while it was quite dark and coming into our bed.  His room is separated from our bedroom by another small room.  We asked him why; whether he had been afraid, perhaps.  'No', he said; 'I'll tell you tomorrow.' He went to sleep in our bed and was then carried back to his own. • Next day I questioned him closely to discover why he had come in to us during the night: and after some reluctance the following dialogue took place, which I immediately took down in shorthand; • Hans: 'In the night there was a big giraffe in the room and a crumpled one; and the big one called out because I took the crumpled one away from it.  Then it stopped calling out; and then I sat down on top of the crumpled one.' • I (puzzled): 'What?  A crumpled giraffe?  How?' • Hans: 'Yes' (He quickly fetched a piece of paper, crumpled it up, and said: 'It was crumpled like that.' • Hans: 'And you sat down on the crumpled giraffe?  [How?] He again showed me by sitting down on the ground. • I: 'Why did you come into our room?' • Hans: 'I didn't know myself.' • I: 'Were you afraid?‘ • Hans: 'No of course not.'

  6. Giraffe fantasy (continued) • I: 'Did you dream about the giraffe?' • Hans: 'No.  I didn't dream it.  I thought it. I thought it all.  I'd woken earlier.' • I: 'What can it mean; a crumpled giraffe?  You know you can't squash a giraffe together like a piece of paper.' " • Hans: 'The crumpled one was all lying on the floor, and 1 took it away - took hold of it with my hands.' • I: 'What?  Can you take hold of a big giraffe like that with your hands?' • Hans: 'I took hold of the crumpled one with my hand.' • I: 'Where was the big one meanwhile?' • Hans: 'The big one just stood further off.' • I: 'What did you do with the crumpled one?' • Hans: 'I held it in my hand for a bit till the big one had stopped calling out.  And when the big one had stopped calling out, I sat down on top of it.‘ • I: 'Why did the big one call out?‘ • Hans: 'Because I'd taken away the little one from it.' (He noticed that I was taking everything down, and asked) 'Why are you writing that down?' • I: 'Because I shall send it to a Professor, who can take away your "nonsense" for you.' • Hans: 'Oho!  So you've written down as well that Mummy took off her chemise, and you'll give that to the Professor too.' • I: 'Yes.  But he won't understand how you can think a giraffe can be crumpled up.'

  7. Separation anxiety • Hans always comes to us in the early morning, and my wife cannot resist taking him into bed with her for a few minutes. Thereupon I always begin to warn her not to take him in bed with her….and she answers now and then, rather irritated, no doubt, that it’s all nonsense, that one minute is after all of no importance… (pg. 182). • …he comes in to me [father] in the morning to see if I have gone away. Unfortunately at the moment I did not understand this, and said to him: “When you’re alone, you’re anxious for me and come in to me.” • Hans: “When you’re away, I’m afraid you’re not coming home.” • I: “And have I ever threatened you that I shan’t come home?” • Hans: “Not you, but Mummy, Mummy’s told me she won’t come back” (He had probably been naughty and she had threatened to go away.) • I: “She said that because you were naughty.” • Hans: “Yes.” • I: “So, you’re afraid I’m going away because you were naughty; that’s why you come into me.” • When I got up from the table after breakfast Hans said “Daddy, don’t trot away from me!” (pg. 187)

  8. Aggression fantasy • I: 'Which would you really like to beat?  Mummy, Hanna or me?‘ • Hans: 'Mummy.' • I: 'Why?' • Hans: 'I should just like to beat her.' • I: 'When did you ever see anyone beating their Mummy?' • Hans: 'I've never seen anyone do it, never in all my life.' • I: 'And yet you'd like to do it.  How would you like to set about it?' • Hans: 'With a carpet-beater.' • I was obliged to break off the conversation for today.

  9. On Hanna • I: “Are you fond of Hanna?” • Hans: “Oh yes, very fond.” • I: Would you rather that Hanna weren’t alive or that she were?” • Hans: I’d rather she weren’t alive.” • I: “Why?” • Hans: “At any rate she wouldn’t scream so, and I can’t bear her screaming.” • I: “Why can’t you bear it?” • Hans: “Because she screams so loud.” • I: “Why, she doesn’t scream at all.” • Hans: “When she’s whacked on her bare bottom, then she screams.” • I: “Have you ever whacked her?” • Hans: When Mummy whacks her on her bottom, then she screams.” • I: “And you don’t like that?” • Hans: “No…because she makes such a row with her screaming.” • I: If you’d rather she weren’t alive, you can’t be fond of her at all.” • Hans (assenting): “H’m, well.” • I: “That was why you thought when Mummy was giving her her bath, if only she’d let go, Hanna would fall into the water…” • Hans (taking me up): “…and die.” • I: “And you’d be alone with Mummy. A good boy doesn’t wish that sort of thing, though.” • Hans: “But he may think it”

  10. Plumber fantasies • Fantasy 1 • Plumber unscrews bath • Plumber sticks a big borer in Hans’s stomach • Fantasy 2 • Hans came to me in the morning. He said, “I thought something today.” At first he had forgotten it’ but later on he related what follows, though with signs of considerable resistance: “The plumber came and first he took away my behind with a pair of pincers, and then he gave me another, and then the same with my widdler.” • I: “He gave you a bigger widdler and a bigger behind?” • Hans: “Yes” • I: Like Daddy’s’ because you’d like to be Daddy.” • Hans: Yes, and I’d like to have a moustache like yours and hairs like yours (he pointed to the hairs on my chest)

  11. Final fantasy • Hans was playing with his imaginary children…. • Said he would marry his mother and that she would have their children (If I don’t want a baby, God won’t want it either, when I’m married.) • His father would marry his own mother and so need not be killed.

  12. More questions • How did Hans develop the fear of horses? (alternative explanations) • What is the link between anxiety and phobia? • Describe Hans’s feelings towards • His sister • His mother • His father • Was the analysis helpful? • Would Hans have improved without it?

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